This brand new complex of 12 homes has only two x three bedroom properties available.
Quality tenants on a new lease already in place. This is an investment where there really nothing to do other than buy it. The vendor is also offering a 2 year rental guarantee. It really could not be any easier.
Absolute quality fittings and inclusions throughout. Professionally selected colours are beautifully offset with quality tiles, carpets 2pac and granite benches. Centrally located a very short walk from the town centre. Small complex with low body corporate.
If you are not local plans are available on request.
About Yandina …
Yandina is 107 kilometres north of Brisbane. The Yandina district has a population of around 8000 people and is well serviced by schools and train. It is Maroochy’s oldest surveyed township.
Yandina is a Sunshine Coast hinterland town just north of Nambour. Its name comes from ‘yan’, meaning “to go”, and ‘dinna’, meaning “feet”. Aboriginal people have lived in the Yandina district for over 40,000 years. They belonged to the Gubbi Gubbi language group which consisted of a number of tribes occupying traditional resource areas. European settlement began in the 1850s and the town of Yandina was surveyed in 1871. It was the first town in the Maroochy district and was called Maroochie until it was named after a nearby cattle run “Yandina”. This name was embraced by locals who rarely used the name Maroochie as they preferred the town’s original name: Native Dog Flat.
Many of the original buildings and the heritage streetscape of Stevens Street have been preserved. The Anglican Church, built initially as a community church and opened in 1880, is the oldest on the Sunshine Coast. The Yandina Hotel dates back to 1889 and was relocated using rollers and a bullock team in 1891 when the railway came through town. Privately owned Koongalba homestead is on the National Heritage List and is one of several historic homes in town. Yandina was originally planned to be the centre of the shire but as the local sugar mill was built in Nambour, more and more people who worked there moved closer.
The early timber getters logged beech, cedar, bunya pine and flooded gum. The timber industry remained important until the 1970s when a shortage of timber forced the closure of the Yandina mill. The fertile land around Yandina has been used for beef and dairy cattle, fruit growing, sugar cane and ginger. Its current claim to fame is in being a ginger town. It is home to the famous Buderim Ginger Factory.